For his first ever international solo show, emerging Japanese architect Akihisa Hirataexhibited an immersive 1:1 scale installation – a contorted loop – that distilled his architecture’s essence into a large-scale experiential structure. Over a hundred study models and conceptual sketches were presented on and within the structure, as well as an interview with the architect and intimate films of his projects, illustrating Hirata’s view of architecture and ecology, form and function, as a complex, interwoven ‘tangle’.

The exhibition opened shortly after Hirata's receipt of the Golden Lion award at the 13th Venice Architecture Biennale for his contribution, with Kumiko Inui, Sou Fujimoto and Naoya Hatakeyama, to the Japanese Pavilion, curated by Toyo Ito.

A social order which is premised on the independence of the individual and whose primary pursuit is the maximization of individual freedom must change in light of the simple reality that the individual is part of a 'tangled order.' And the same can probably also be said of rationality in architecture.- Akihisa Hirata

Interested in creating simple, elegant and essential geometric solutions that emulate and abstract nature's millions of years of experience - pitched roofs that mimic mountain ranges, housing clusters that echo trees - Hirata rigorously explores future possibilities for architecture and structure; to make more complex our understanding of the relationship between the natural and the artificial, and to increase architecture's capacity to aid living and freedom, beyond Modernism and the 20th Century's dated fixation with iconic shapes and open-plan spaces.

At a point in which architecture and society more broadly was seriously questioning its future, purpose and relationship to the natural world, the exhibition offered an in-depth exploration of Hirata's ideas, demonstrating his innovative formal approach and distinctive interpretation of the relationship between architecture and environment.